Search Results for: Cinnamon not crushed
surface hard, smooth at first, becoming pimply, pinkish brown, reddish brown, dark brown or, eventually, nearly black; interior with concentric zones of blackish and whitish or grayish, carbon-like flesh; outer layer at maturity with embedded black perithecia. chemical reactions : outer crust, when crushed
in koh , releasing brown to reddish brown pigments. odor : not distinctive. microscopic features : spores – x – μm; ellipsoid, with a somewhat flattened side, or widely subfusiform; with a thin, straight germ slit extending most of the length of the spore; smooth; very dark brown in koh ; with a brownish...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/daldinia_childiae.html
prolific late-summer mushrooms. it can reach astounding sizes, and often fruits in great numbers. initially white, it is soon off-white with light brownish discolorations, and distinctively roughened or even scaly. other distinguishing features include the gills, which are close or almost distant, but not
densely crowded like the gills in lactarius piperatus . the cap margin is inrolled at first, and is very softly leathery, like kid leather. in age the margin is typically still folded under just a little bit, and still soft. however, the cap and stem are not finely velvety overall, as they are in lactarius...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lactarius_deceptivus.html
conifer debris, usually found under pines (species of pinus, with bundled needles). it is very similar to gymnopus dryophilus , but it tends to have a reddish brown, rather than yellow-brown, cap. additionally, its stem is frequently somewhat club-shaped and its gills are often finely jagged--features not
winter and spring in warmer climates); fairly widely distributed in north america. the illustrated and described collections are from colorado and illinois. cap: – cm across; convex, becoming broadly convex or nearly flat; moist, with a greasy feel, when fresh; bald; reddish brown to brown, fading to cinnamon...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/rhodocollybia_butyracea.html